This AI startup will clean your home for free to train future robots
AI training startup Shift wants to clean your home for free. The catch — because, despite what its website says, there’s always a catch — is that it will record cleaners as they scrub, vacuum, dust, tidy, and wash, and use that footage to train robots.
Shift announced the unusual offer on social media on Thursday, explaining that the value of the training data generated from the cleanings is more than enough to fund the service. As its website puts it: “You get a spotless apartment. We get training data. Everyone wins.”
A promotional video shows a cleaner in a crisp white uniform and awkward-looking hat (more on that later) washing windows, mopping and vacuuming floors, scrubbing dishes, and wiping down counters. According to Shift’s co-CEO and co-founder Bercan Kilic, this “magic hat” is what records the work. Peak fashion it is not, but it does contain a camera that captures footage from the cleaner’s point of view.
Footage from inside your home is, of course, what you’re paying for the cleaning service with. On its website, Shift says customers’ “privacy is fully protected,” with sensitive details like names, faces, or personal information from screens and ID cards blurred and anonymized before being used for AI training. Shift says its cleaners are also vetted by its partners, though stresses they are not Shift employees.
“Every home cleaned today lays the groundwork for a home that cleans itself tomorrow,” the company says in the video. As it happens, the dirtier the better. An FAQ on the company’s website says “more challenging cleaning environments can be especially useful.” There are limits, however, and cleaners “may decline any specific task they are not comfortable performing.”
The service is initially only available in New York, but Kilic says it will be available “very soon” in San Francisco, London, Zurich, and Munich. The free cleanings are only available for a “limited time,” but the model fits within a growing market for recordings of human tasks that can be used to train AI systems and robots. Shift says it already pays tens of thousands of people across 15 countries to record their activities through its app.
Cleaning may only be the start. Shift’s video says it eventually plans to move into other areas like plumbing, cooking, and building.
Follow topics and authors from this story to see more like this in your personalized homepage feed and to receive email updates.
- Robert Hart
Related Articles
4nm!比亚迪自研AI芯片来了:制程对齐英伟达,算力拉爆特斯拉
< img id="wx_img" src="https://www.qbitai.com/wp-content/uploads/imgs/qbitai-logo-1.png" width="400" height="400"> 2026-05-29 ...
Jony Ive’s funky Ferrari
On The Vergecast: The Ferrari Luce, the people vs. AI, and RGB LED TVs.On The Vergecast: The Ferrari Luce, the people vs. AI, and RGB LED TVs.by David PierceMay 29, 2026, 12:25 PM UTCDavid Pierce is...
光帆科技与腾讯出行服务达成战略合作 开启新一轮预售
< img id="wx_img" src="https://www.qbitai.com/wp-content/uploads/imgs/qbitai-logo-1.png" width="400" height="400"> 光帆科技与腾讯出行服务达成战略合作...
PPIO入选非凡产研「2026 Global AI 100」,以AI实力领跑出海新浪潮
< img id="wx_img" src="https://www.qbitai.com/wp-content/uploads/imgs/qbitai-logo-1.png" width="400" height="400"> 2026-05-29 ...